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Final Approach
No apology necessary from where I sit, I agree 100% with this. I do not advocating increasing the mandatory 3 hours for the PPL, but I do think that getting recurrent hood time every few months should be strongly encouraged by all instructors. It isn't just inadvertent VFR into IMC that is dangerous to pilots without adequate instrument skills, it's also conditions that are legally VFR but require being on the gauges to control the plane, such as flying over open water in summer haze or at night, basically the kinds of conditions that did in JFK Jr. The ability to safely navigate such conditions is something ALL pilots should develop and maintain, especially since they are often difficult to predict or anticipate, and avoiding them with 100% certainty would require adhering to VERY conservative personal minimums....this tells me that we don't spend enough time flying by instruments in the PPL world. If you fly enough as a VFR pilot then eventually you are going to get into some real haze, between layers, night disorientation, etc... even if you are "legal VFR" you will eventually be effectively flying on instruments at some point
Why PPL spends SO LITTLE TIME focusing on proper instrument flying is beyond me. I get the basics of teaching stalls, etc., and having the 3 hr minimum hood time, but we'd make some huge safety advances in these accidents if we covered proper instrument flying in PPL.. I don't mean flying approaches and learning the ins and outs of the IFR world.. but any pilot should be able to keep the plane right side up and navigate themselves out of the clouds without an IR rating
To me the lack of proper instrument flying training the PPL world is akin to giving someone a drivers license after just having them learn how to turn the car on and off and make circles in a parking lot
/rant over. Sorry.